The Art of Poetry No. 113
“I told myself, Thank goodness those poets proclaimed Black is beautiful, because now I can talk about how Black is everything.”
“I told myself, Thank goodness those poets proclaimed Black is beautiful, because now I can talk about how Black is everything.”
You prefer me invisible, no more than
a crisp salute far away from
your silks and firewood and woolens.
A bench, a sofa, anyplace flat—
just let me down
somewhere quiet, please,
a strange lap, a patch of grass . . .
The sky is not a glass of anything;
it winks, it’s a parable,
the kind your mother told whenever
It is Sunday, day of roughhousing. We are let out in the woods. The young boys wrestle and butt their heads together like sheep—a circle forms; claps and shouts fill the air. The women, brown and glossy, gather round the banjo player, or simply lie in the sun, legs and aprons folded.